Work in Egypt
Get
a Tourist Visa and Take Your Time Looking
By Jane E. Cuccia
Finding a teaching
job in Egypt is a bit more difficult now than in the past. Private K-12s,
where the language of instruction is English, now annually produce graduates
fluent in both English and Arabic who go on to take positions previously
filled by native speakers. Since most adult students want to know enough
English to understand business and acquire computer skills, Americans
who want to teach in Egypt will do better if they are specialized in
one of these two fields rather than in general language skills.
Plenty of jobs
do exist, but it will be easier to find what you want if you are already
in Egypt and have enough funds to see you through two or three months.
Come on a tourist visa and take your time looking around.
Cairo American
College is a private K-12 school totally American in its system and
therefore in the qualifications of its teachers. It caters to the children
of diplomats and of other expatriates living in Egypt for a limited
time. The tuition is extremely high, and teachers are paid on an American
salary scale.
The Center for
Adult and Continuing Education (CACE) of the American Univ. in Cairo
hires a limited number of teachers to teach English as a second language.
Interviews are granted to five applicants a month. Only teachers with
long experience or an internationally recognized certificate in teaching
English to adults are hired. More information about the CACE can be
found at their web site CACEstudent.aucegypt.edu or at www.aucegypt.edu.
The internationally
famous Berlitz School of Languages usually hires full-timers, trains
them in their methodology, and pays well. Their web site, www.berlitz.com,
lists vacancies here and in their branches worldwide.
Amideast, www.amideast.org promotes intercultural understanding between the U.S. and countries
of the Middle East. It hires only very qualified teachers.
The British Council, www.britishcouncil.org.eg,
another intercultural organization, favors British English speakers
and insists on British certification. The International Language Institute
(ILI) offers an instructor training course but no guarantee of a job
upon completion of the course.
Numerous nursery
schools around Cairo are looking for native speakers to work with preschool
children. A love of children is more important than certification.
Tutoring Egyptian
language school students is another possibility, but I don’t advise
it unless you know the people you’ll be getting involved with
or they come highly recommended. Strangers might set up appointments
with you out of curiosity or with ulterior motives.
Job Information
A very useful publication
is the Maadi Messenger, published by volunteers and available at English-speaking
churches and in districts with expatriate communities, such as Maadi,
Zamalek, and Heliopolis. Jobs, such as babysitting and tutoring of American
children, are often listed. The Middle East Times also occasionally
lists jobs. Many jobs are not listed anywhere, however; it is up to
the person to find one by applying at the human resources or personnel
office of a company or school and wait for results.
The Cairo Yellow
Pages, listing many businesses both in the capital and in Alexandria,
is available online at www.egyptyellowpages.com.eg.
Searching under “Schools” and “Language Training” will lead you to updated contact information.
Learning “survival
Arabic” will make your stay much easier. Taxi drivers and store
employees do not always speak English. The institutions mentioned above
offer all levels of Arabic at competitive prices.
Tourists report
that Egyptians are the friendliest people they have ever met; they constantly
help friends, acquaintances, or total strangers. So if you decide to
visit Egypt for an extended period of time, you need never feel alone
or isolated.
JANE CUCCIA is married
to an Egyptian and has taught ESL in Cairo for over 20 years.
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